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Czar Wars: Can the Rebels Fight Back?

There is something troubling about Americans’ newfound willingness to accept and submit to czarist authority.
(And don't miss Glenn Reynolds' look at "Obama's House of Czars" at PJTV.)

by
Amit Ghate

Bio

April 3, 2010 - 12:00 am
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Thus czar advocates are authoritarians. But what of critics? Unfortunately, on the essential point, they’re no better. Their typical criticism hinges on who confirms and supervises the czars.  They ignore — and thus concede — the real issue. Consider for instance this argument from a column by Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX):

As the senior Republican on the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, I oversee legislation and agencies that cover policy areas as vast and varied as trade, technology, transit, consumer protection and commercial regulation. As many as 10 of the 32 czars functionally fall under my committee’s jurisdiction. Yet neither I nor the committee chairman have clear authority to compel these czars to appear before our panel and report what they are doing. The Obama administration presented only two of these officials for our consideration before they assumed their duties. We have had no opportunity to probe the others’ credentials. (my emphasis)

Preserving our system of checks and balances is undoubtedly vital, but only in the context of our nation’s founding principle: the protection of individual rights. In the quote above, the real question is:  Why should the government run such vast areas of our lives? Why should a czar or committee meddle when consenting adults wish to trade? Why should they decide whether potentially life-saving stem cell research is to be allowed? Why should they forcibly take one individual’s taxes to subsidize another’s “green job”?

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Fundamentally czars represent undue authority over citizens’ lives. This isn’t made better by making the usurping authority an elected committee. Rather than standing for a valid principle, Hutchinson and her kind are simply engaged in a turf battle to determine who gets to control the government’s myriad rights violations. Accordingly, czar critics are also authoritarians.

But if they’re wrong, if government authority shouldn’t replace its citizens’ evaluations nor rule their lives, what’s the alternative? After all, don’t we need the “coordination” and “catalysts” Reeder espouses?

Yes and no. As the Founding Fathers so brilliantly recognized, society must have an organizing principle, but that doesn’t mean we need authoritarianism. For instance, in any legitimate sense of “coordinate,” the free market is the only mechanism by which everyone’s actual demands and concerns — ones they’re willing to work and pay for — can be accounted for and reconciled.  Indeed there’s a whole literature showing how economic calculation and coordination are only possible under a free market.  This is why authoritarian regimes, such as exist under socialism and communism, necessarily fail economically.

More importantly, the only “catalyst” of science and trade is freedom. No progress, life, or happiness is possible without the freedom to think and pursue one’s own values and goals. To the extent that government, whether by czars or otherwise, restricts and removes our freedoms, it makes life worse.  If it goes far enough, as it did in Russia — the original land of czars — all that’s left to the individual is misery, mass starvation, and death.

Government’s proper role is not as an authority which sets, replaces, or invalidates its citizens’ judgments and values. On the contrary, government exists solely to protect each individual’s freedom to choose and pursue values. That’s the fundamental — and irreconcilable — difference between a country of czars and a country of rights.

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Amit Ghate began his career as a mechanical engineer but now trades stocks for a living. In his free time, when he’s not rock climbing or at the gym, he writes and maintains his blog Thrutch. He currently resides in Southern California.

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24 Comments, 22 Threads, 2 Trackbacks

  1. 1. Jay Getty

    The lesson the American people need from the Czar era is:

    The Czar ruled by the rule of law; only he defined a set of laws that no one could abide by so “they” could legally jail who ever they wanted! Is:
    1) the USA there
    2) headed there or
    3) how stupid

  2. 2. Kipling

    Presidents use the czar system to circumvent the normal political process and bypass the existing bureaucratic impasse. The existing federal bureaucracies are notoriously unresponsive to the results of elections and inbedded liberals in those bureaucracies can sabatoge elected administrative policy. Republicans usually use the czar system to get around these liberal civil servants who refuse to serve the people. Democrats use the czar system to bypass Congressional oversight and other political controls over policy.

    How should the people respond to the czars?

    The Tea Party protestors and others already voice their opposition to the system. November will be the first chance for a widespread vote on the admninistration and its policies. The only other recourse is to pressure members of Congress to legislatively intervene against the system or eliminate funding but, since both parties use the system, what are the chances. Perhaps the conservative rebels could press for a plank in the Republican platform. I am open to suggestions.

    If I was a CEO, I would tell the Pay Czar where to put his executive ruling – as I would Waxman in Congress.

  3. Another great essay by Amit Ghate! He identifies two disturbing trends that every American should be alarmed by: (1) The government is overstepping its proper bounds and (2) it’s doing so with arbitrary non-objective regulations. Both are dangers to the American principle of rule of law (rather than rule by men). If we wish to take back our country, we need to identify and oppose the basic premises driving our opponents. Ghate does a nice job of both!

  4. Amit Ghate’s excellent op-ed piece draws attention to what should be an outrage: The continuing growth of government interference in our lives in the form of powerful bureaucratic appointees. But why isn’t there more outrage? Could it be that the American people have been so brainwashed by our inadequate education that unlike the intellectual ancestors they are perfectly content to submit to such authority? I hope not and the Tea Party movement is a sign that some of the original spirit and ideas that motivated the Founders of this great nation remains. What is required to fight this trend is clear, explicit, principled identification of the proper principles of a free society (for details see http://principlesofafreesociety.com/ ). That would strongly motivate people to oppose such absurdities as “American Czars” as well as all the rest of the unjustified government intrusion into our lives.

  5. 5. Clay Marley

    Does a czar have any power and authority over anything? If so, why? Is it not power by fiat? There is nothing in the constitution, nor any rule of law that gives these czars any authority to command anyone to do anything. If people and organizations pay attention to these czars it is because they have become sheep.

    What am I missing?

  6. This is an insightful and witty analysis and I’m sharing it on Facebook.

  7. Amit Ghate writes about “czars” in US government:

    “When government embraces this type of ambiguity — and citizens accept it — it’s a sign of growing authoritarianism. It signals that citizens don’t deem it necessary to understand and judge government power; they’ll uncritically swallow any proposal or dictate.”

    This explains a main catalyst for the rise of the Tea Party movement. For many decades now, Americans have been willing to accepting this growing authoritarianism, but the best among them are starting to its consequences: the state’s unchecked authority of over their lives.

    Thank you, Amit Ghate, for writing this piece that I expect will wake up more Americans to another area that is contributing to the growing authoritarianism in our government.

  8. An interesting article. Thank you, Mr. Ghate. I agree that Americans are increasingly willing to accept authority figures. To reject authoritarianism, one must know that self-interest is morally right. If you do not accept that, you will not accept individual rights as the all-important principle that must be asserted and restored. For over a century Americans have been “softened” up to accept totalitarianism by a constant scream that they must sacrifice the self. Give up your work, your values, your thought and desires to the group. Such a barrage can wear you down if you do not have the correct antidote to self-sacrifice. When one accepts authority in place of one’s rights, one is saying that choice is too much of an effort. This is the mentality of those who were subjected to Soviet Communism. Even when offered freedom, they returned instead to duty and obedience to the state, displaying the death of the self. This is what authoritarians are after. This is what the Leftists are after. In the words of one of Ayn Rand’s characters in the novel Atlas Shrugged: “They do not want to live. They want you to die.”

  9. 9. Jay Golan

    The Congress should be made to work from home or start meeting at revolving sites outside of Washington. Maybe then they would start considering their constituents over the government. It would be a lot easier cutting useless departments.They should also be forbidden from taking any campaign money out of their district. It’s time to put congress on a leash and the feds on a chain.

  10. 10. max

    The problem is more one of centralization’s blind spot. Centralization works fine in a homogenized setting, where everyone is basically the same and has the same wants and needs. That is why centralized socialism could work in a few homogeneous countries (and is breaking down now that they are losing their homogeneity). Centralization fails when it is applied to a heterogeneous system where the wants and needs of people are varied and dissimilar. It is also why centralized socialism can not be successful in a pluralistic country like the US.

    This doesn’t just apply to government, it applies to other systems.
    - centralization works fine for a company which has 40 cardboard-box making plants scattered throughout the US. They all need basically the same raw materials, use similar machines and are marketing to the same type of customers
    - centralization fails for a company which has 3 diverse plants making automobiles, ballpoint pens and plumbing fixtures. They all use different materials, they market to different groups, they use different machinery and the manufacturing processes are not at all similar.

  11. 11. Fiona

    The levers that the Czars are pushing are not connected to anything – this makes them an expensive waste of space and effort. Their powers are advisory, but cabinet level posts command the management bureaucracy. Czars connect to the President only. Lower level bureaucrats can sucessfully evade most of the czar’s requirements. If the presiding Cabinet officer does not support the czar, no information will flow. I think of them as a way for a president to award a lot of money to his friends.

    You might mention that most of Bush’s appointees went through the Senate; most of Obama’s have not.

  12. 12. Warren Bonesteel

    “When government embraces this type of ambiguity — and citizens accept it — it’s a sign of growing authoritarianism. It signals that citizens don’t deem it necessary to understand and judge government power; they’ll uncritically swallow any proposal or dictate.”

    Bingo.

    The present left-right divide in America often seems to be less a discussion about freedom and liberty, and more of a discussion about which master(s) are allowed to place the chains on our legs and the collars around our necks.

  13. 13. Dave Lincoln

    Amit, I totally agree with the gist of the column, but, dude, you’ve gotta know some history so you don’t put mistakes in the second paragraph.

    Czar means king, like Caesar or Koenig (can’t you tell that the 2 words “Czar” and “Caesar” are related, as are “King” and “Koenig”?) Czar was spelled differently in Russian of course (I think “Tsar”, but I’m no Ruskie). Czars were the kings in Russia before the Communists took over. There was, in fact, a movie made about the fall of the last Czar, called “Nicolas and Alexandria” (Lots of action, as I recall). Czar was in no way a pejorative term as you say.

    It’s just a small mistake, but the initial showing of your lack of historical knowledge makes people think you are stupid, and that may stop them from continuing to read the column. I know you are not stupid, as I read that rest of the column and agree with it wholeheartedly, although it has all been said before. It may be constitutional to have a guy called a “czar” as an advisor, but that’s about all.

    • BAHMainakis

      Hi, Dave.

      I think you’ve misunderstood Amit’s second paragraph. He’s not saying that the term “Czar” was first used in the 19th century. He’s saying that the first time it was used in a pejoritive way was in the 19th century.

      • Dave Lincoln

        OK, BAHMainakis, I guess it makes sense now.

        Thanks for the reply.

  14. 14. AE

    A great essay–of a kind which is all-too-rare in this day and age: it is genuinely pro-liberty.

  15. 15. Roxanne A.

    Amit Ghate focuses on an important phenomenon: our acceptance, or acquiescence, with so many czars (I had NO idea Bush had only 3 less than Obama) shows Americans are becoming more “comfortable” with authoritarianism. But how does one oppose the czars? Is there away to sue the President for being promiscuous with presidential power, or is this something a Congressman or Senator must object to? What would be the mechanism to reverse it? It’s frightening how much power these unelected, appointed positions can wield.

  16. 16. TK

    Nice article,
    Great job pointing out that this is a bipartisan problem…both parties are of equal blame. I hope this topic doesn’t get forgotten in the news. It is nice to see it getting some real investigative attention.

  17. Complacency toward increasing government size and power is fueled in large part by people’s sense of a need for something to counterbalance the power of big business. Unfortunately, what many fail to realize is that the illegitimate power of large business is due to gaming the government. This is currently made possible by our mixed economy. A government of limited scope and power, one that is trimmed back to the protection of individual rights and equality before the law, would provide a level legal playing field–also known as the free market.

    The existence of czars is a symptom of large government, the growth of which comes from looking to government to solve all our problems: housing, health care, student loans, and on and on.

    Mr. Ghate correctly points out that organization and planning in our lives and our society is necessary—but central planning is accompanied by greater and greater authoritarianism and abridgment of our liberties. The alternative is a government which protects its citizens from fraud and the initiation of force, thus freeing them to live by their own plans and interact voluntarily.

  18. 18. tina

    I do not accept these czars,they need to be removed,they are as unconstitutional,as obama,his policies,the healthcare bill,anything he has done from election til he is removed is null and void.

  19. Ohio Congressional Candidate Paul Schiffer has already written legislation to OUTLAW the practice of political “Czars” in the White House. His legislation would NOT affect the NAME used for any White House or other official. His legislation would allow Presidents to have any advisors they wish.

    However, his legislation would CLARIFY that NO White House personnel has power to COMMAND any part or anyone anywhere in the government or in the private sector, and that no government official or personnel may suffer any consequences for disregarding orders from any White House official other than the President himself.

    Only the President himself can wield the power of President in his own name.

    The Legislation makes exceptions for any chain of command officially set up by Congress adn signed into law, and obviously allows White House supervisors to supervise their own employees inside the White House staff.
    SEE:
    http://www.electpaulschiffer.com/legislation.html

    PROHIBITING “CZARS” Paul Schiffer will file his “PROHIBITION OF UNELECTED CZARS ACT OF 2011 his first week in Congress.

    THIS LEGISLATION WILL:

    a) PROHIBIT any official or employee of the “Executive Office of the President” (the White House staff) — other than the President himself — from giving orders or directives to any government official or employee outside the White House.

    b) PROHIBIT any Federal funds from being spent (including as salary) for any “Czar.”

    To download the Bill, “RIGHT CLICK” HERE (Click the RIGHT hand button on your mouse), then select “Save Target As”

    http://www.electpaulschiffer.com/NoCzar.pdf

  20. TO FIONA and others:

    The concern about czars is not merely the situation today, but the danger that tolerating the practice will allow it to GROW over time.

    So you say that the czars are levers that don’t connect to anything, that is that czars have no power. Actually, the whole POINT of most czars is that they can bully and intimidate government agencies and knock heads to do what they want simply because they are in the White House.

    So the fear is that in a moment of cricis, especially, czars would become an alternate set of power centers that would seize control and act like they’re in charge, a la Alexander Haig saying “I’m in charge here” when Ronald Reagan was shot and in the hospital.

  21. 21. Vespasiano

    “Government’s proper role is not as an authority which sets, replaces, or invalidates its citizens’ judgments and values. On the contrary, government exists solely to protect each individual’s freedom to choose and pursue values. That’s the fundamental — and irreconcilable — difference between a country of czars and a country of rights.”
    Thank-you, thank-you Mr. Ghate! Beautifully put.

  22. Mr. Ghate hits another home run. Great job!

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